Groundbreaking Blindness Cure Will Come With $850,000 Price Tag

That’s a corollary question that a transformative medical treatment released by Spark Therapeutics seeks to answer. The treatment, known as Luxturna, has the potential to cure a rare genetically inherited form of blindness, according to Bloomberg.

Luxturna

The price tag? $850,000 – or $425,000 per eye.

A transformative genetic treatment for a rare, inherited form of blindness will come with a price tag of of $425,000 per eye, or $850,000 for both, said Spark Therapeutics Inc., the tiny biotechnology company that is bringing the therapy to market.

Since Spark’s Luxturna was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration last month, speculation over the price has grown as it became clear the therapy would be one of the first in a wave of medicines that yield remarkable results after a single treatment - and would carry a commensurate cost.

Of course, few patients will pay the whole amount out-of-pocket. Even for the uninsured, Spark will offer discounts based on whether or not the drug works initially and remains effective for the estimated 1,000 to 2,000 patients in the US with the inherited retinal disease caused by the gene mutation that the medication treats.

Though the price tag also reflects what Spark CEO Jeff Marrazzo describes as the drug’s “life-altering” properties.

“We believe that this price reflects not only the breakthrough, life-altering value of one-time Luxturna, but it will enable us to continue to invest and build on the revolutionary science that supports not only Luxturna but the rest of our pipeline,” Chief Executive Officer Jeff Marrazzo said in a phone interview.

The company’s “novel” pricing scheme was devised to help placate insurers who don’t want to get stuck paying for the entire course of treatment if a patient changes plans while still enjoying the benefits of the treatment, which only needs to be administered one time.

A one-time treatment presented a challenge, since the cost would be paid for by one insurer or government, only to have others reap the benefits when the patient changes coverage.

To help mitigate that dynamic, Spark is rolling out several programs to spread out the cost over the years or give rebates to payers if the benefits wane with time.

For example, the company said it’s discussing a program with the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services that would spread payments for Luxturna over several years, even though the therapy would be given only once. It didn’t say how many installments would be made, or how long it would take to pay the full cost of the drug.

Insurers are also wary of getting stuck with the entire bill if the treatment proves ineffective, or if its benefits only persist for a brief period.

In an agreement with the Boston-area insurer Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, Spark will get the full price of treatment up front. If patients don’t get an immediate benefit - measured at 30 days, or a long term one - measured at 30 months, Spark will have to give some of the money back in a rebate.

Spark has also proposed selling the gene therapy directly to insurance companies or specialty pharmacies. That would sidestep the current process that requires hospitals or health care providers to buy expensive therapies upfront. Spark is working with Express Scripts Holding Co. on such an arrangement, and said it’s talking with other drug plans.

However, some insurers said they expected the drug to cost even more, considering the narrow customer base.

Express Scripts has been a frequent critic of costly drugs, yet said that the Spark treatment is an exception.

"Many people were anticipating this would be more than a million dollars" said Steve Miller, the St. Louis-based company’s chief medical officer. “In the end, this is a revolutionary product, and I think in most plans this will be covered."

Spark’s biggest challenge may be finding patients to treat.

Of the few thousand people with the disease, only a few have actually been tested and confirmed to have it, since there was no cure, and thus little use in diagnosis. Many with more advanced forms of the disease won’t qualify for treatment, according to the company.

However, Spark may need to raise the price if its medication if it doesn’t find enough people to treat. Only a few thousand people in the US possess the genetic mutation that the drug treats. And many of them won’t qualify for treatment.

Spark’s biggest challenge may be finding patients to treat.

Of the few thousand people with the disease, only a few have actually been tested and confirmed to have it, since there was no cure, and thus little use in diagnosis. Many with more advanced forms of the disease won’t qualify for treatment, according to the company.

Capitalism would put this company out of business. Welfare state and government mandating insurance companies pay for this incredibly rare treatment is what will keep this company alive and inspire thousands of other companies to produce drugs that will help a handful of people while bankrupting the health care system.

How about a new reality TV show, Eyesight to the Blind? The network picks up the tab and we could follow the entire process from selection of the suitable candidate to the wonder of a blind man's first sight of a flower, his child's face and hard core pornography. It has it all.

I doubt it will be like that. Anyone blind from birth is going to have to build up ocular muscle control, retinal response, they are gonna have to learn what these new sensations are and how they relate to the world they know. I imagine it will take months for them to recognize shape and pattern, interposed objects, motion detection, etc.

A man walks into a bank and asks for a million-dollar loan. The banker inquires what the loan is for. The man pulls out a small bottle from his pocket and puts it on the table. Inside the bottle is some yellow colored powder. He tells the banker they sprinkle the powder on a pussy and it makes it taste like an orange.

The banker tells to get the fuck out of his office and that is the stupidest idea he's ever heard of.

The man puts the little bottle back in his pocket and leaves.

A year later the same man comes back to the bank and asks to open account to deposit 10 million dollars into.

This will keep being an issue over and over again, this is why rare diseases don't get cures, no money in it. Something needs to be made factory/industry like about this process of curing peculiar genetic aberrations.

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